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Treat Blood Pressure


High blood pressure is a problem for many people.

My name is Doctor Gordon Cameron and thank you for visiting my hypertension website. It's my aim in life to help you to lower blood pressure and to keep you up to date with new blood pressure information and treatment tips with the information written in a simple clear way.


New Test Predicts Heart Attack Risk


Heart Attack Risk

A new quick and painless test could save your life.

An ultrasound scan on the carotid arteries, the small blood vessels that run along either side of your neck can give insight into the health of your whole vascular system.

Ultrasound of the carotid arteries allows doctors to measure the thickness of those arteries and the thickness predicts how likely you are to have a stroke, heart attack or sudden death.
Carotid ultrasound is a test that shows how thick the carotid artery walls are as well as how much blood flows and how fast it travels through them.
Ultrasound waves - the same ones used in imaging the fetus in a pregnant woman - are used to make an image of the arteries. This image can be used to find out if there is an abnormality or blockage of the carotid arteries that could lead to stroke.

The test is simple and reliable and - when combined with a full assessment of other risk factors and preventitive factors - can predict your risk of heart attack or stroke. Treatment can be started at an early stage - early enough that it might well save your life.

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Treat high blood pressure

Treat High Blood Pressure

By the nature of a large site like this I tend to find that the older articles get a bit lost over time.
So - if you're interested -here are a few of the highlights from previous months and years of writing about high blood pressure treatment.

Firstly, and this article about your blood pressure reading was one of the first I published on the subject, you might like to read about what those blood pressure numbers actually mean. Discover the difference between the upper and the lower numbers and learn why they're written the way they are.

Next, take a look at this piece about weight loss and blood pressure. Discover why weight loss can help with blood pressure treatment.

If you have very high blood pressure then you'll be interested in this article and lastly for now, check out this section about combined medication to treat high blood pressure

I'll write these review highlight sections from time to time so check back again or sign up for my regular newsletter.

Stay well.

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Alcohol and Blood Pressure

Alcohol and Blood Pressure

Is alcohol good or bad for your blood pressure?

People with high blood pressure need not be teetotal and may benefit from a regular tipple, a US study suggests. The research showed that men with high blood pressure reduced their risk of a heart attack by having a drink or two a day.

But experts warned too much alcohol can raise blood pressure and said the findings should not be used as a licence to drink. It's a no brainer really but you need to remember that alcohol can harm and should not be used as a medicine.

On or two glasses of beer or two small glasses of wine or a small glass of spirits reduced the risk of a heart attack, even if they had high blood pressure.

Light drinkers, who consumed less than one drink every two or three days, did not have a lower risk of heart attack than non-drinkers, however.

The study authors stressed that more than three drinks a day raises blood pressure and the risk of hypertension, adding, "so our findings are not a license for men with hypertension to overindulge".

However, lead author Joline Beulens, at the Harvard School of Public Health, added: "Because excess alcohol intake clearly increases blood pressure, many men with hypertension are counselled not to drink, but our results suggest that may not be necessary if men drink safely and responsibly."

Past research has shown that one way alcohol consumption decreases the risk of heart disease is by increasing the levels of "good" cholesterol and possibly thinning the blood.
Judy O'Sullivan of the British Heart Foundation said: "With alcohol consumption there is a fine line between benefit and risk.

"This study concluded that drinking alcohol in moderation is safe for men with high blood pressure. However, alcohol should not be used as a medicine and those who are teetotal do not need to start consuming alcohol to benefit their heart health.

"It should be remembered that drinking to excess carries serious health risks.
"If you want to improve your heart health our advice is to avoid smoking, eat a balanced diet low in salt and saturated fat and take regular physical activity," she advised.

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A Vaccine Against High Blood Pressure?

A vaccine against high blood pressure

Can a simple vaccine jab protect you from stroke and heart disease?

Researchers think they have developed a vaccine to control high blood pressure. The vaccine is derived from a protein found in limpets and the hope is that it would need a course of just three jabs, with a booster every six months.

The commonest way of treating blood pressure at the moment is with pills, but they can cause side-effects and some patients simply stop taking them.

Now Protherics - a British drug company - says its vaccine will make it much easier for people to control their blood pressure.

The jab, which has been successfully tested on people, uses the limpet protein to attack a hormone called angiotensin, which is produced by the liver. This is similar to the way that medicines like lisinopril, ramipril and perindopril work.

People who have tried the new vaccine have suffered few side-effects, although one in ten did complain of a brief, flu-like illness. Ideally, patients would be given an initial course of three injections, with a week or fortnight between each jab. A booster shot every six months, or even once a year, would keep blood pressure low.

It is not known how much the vaccines will cost but they are not expected to be much more expensive than current blood pressure tablets, some of which cost just a few pence a day.

In time, the vaccine may be given to ward off problems in young men and women with a family history of heart disease.

Some blood pressure tablets already available work by targeting angiotensin, either by cutting production of the hormone or by stopping it from working properly. But many people stop taking the daily tablets simply because there are no obvious signs that they are boosting their health.

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Omega Fatty Acids Lower Blood Pressure

Omega 3 Fatty Acids and Blood Pressure

Alter your diet and lower your blood pressure

A diet rich in nutrients called omega-3 fatty acids can help lower a person's blood pressure. Foods rich in Omega 3 include fish and nuts.

A new large study looked at diet and its relation to blood pressure in 4,680 men and women, ages 40 to 59, who lived in Japan, China, Britain and the United States.

They all provided in-depth details about their diets and alcohol consumption, gave urine samples and had their blood pressure measured twice at each of four study visits.

The people who ate diets rich in omega-3 fatty acids had slightly lower blood pressure, on average, than people who ate diets with less of the nutrient, the researchers reported in the American Heart Association Journal Circulation.

"With blood pressure, every millimeter counts. The effect of each nutrient is apparently small but independent, so together they can add up to a substantial impact on blood pressure," said Dr. Hirotsugu Ueshima of Shiga University of Medical Science in Otsu, Japan.

"If you can reduce blood pressure a few millimeters from eating less salt, losing a few pounds, avoiding heavy drinking, eating more vegetables, whole grains and fruits (for their fiber, minerals, vegetable protein and other nutrients) and getting more omega-3 fatty acids, then you've made a big difference," Ueshima said in a statement.

When it comes to omega-3 fatty acids, not all fish or nuts are equal. Fatty fish such as trout, salmon and mackerel are rich in this crucial group of nutrients.

Walnuts, flaxseed and canola oil are also good sources of omega-3 fatty acids and people who got their omega-3s from these sources had just as much benefit as those who get them by eating fish, the study found.

Omega-3 fatty acid intake has also been linked to better brain development and a lower overall risk of cancer and heart disease.

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Seven Weird Ways to Die Young !

Seven Weird Ways to Die Young

What advice would you give to a non married, pessimistic pop star who has recently lost weight and lowered their cholesterol level by taking vitamin supplements?

Easy - stay in bed until after lunch of course !

We all know lots of tips about staying healthy and get advice from every TV chat show and billboard. But check out these weird facts if you want to (or want not to ) die young!

Here's how to make sure you die at an early age - hint ... the more of these tips you follow the better (or worse, depends how you look at it)

  1. Remain pessimistic at all times
    A 70-year long study of personality traits shows that pessimism is a risk factor for early death, especially among men. Pessimism can also be linked to increased risk for sudden
    death from accidents or violence. Compared with individuals with a more cheerful and optimistic outlook, pessimists were more likely to die from accidents and violence (including suicide). A pessimistic way of seeing the world in which people catastrophize about bad events, predicts untimely death decades later.
    So cheer up - you'll be dead soon!

  2. Eat too many vitamins
    Scientists at Copenhagen University found that people taking supplements which contained vitamins A and E and beta carotene were found to have a five per cent greater risk of dying than those who were not taking them. The research analysed the results of several studies involving over 180,000 people into the benefits of vitamins A, E, and C, along with beta carotene and selenium. Another Big Mac anyone?

  3. Become a famous popstar
    Rock and pop stars are more than twice as likely as the rest of the population to die an early death. The findings are based on more than 1,050 North American and European musicians and singers who shot to fame between 1956 and 1999. All the musicians studied were featured in the All Time Top 1,000 albums, selected in 2000. The albums chosen covered rock, punk, rap, R&B, electronica and new age genres. How long the pop stars survived once they had achieved chart success and become famous was compared with the expected longevity of the general population.
    In all, 100 stars died early between 1956 and 2005. The average age of death was 42 for North American stars and 35 for European stars. When compared with the rest of the population in the U.K. and the U.S., rock and pop stars were about twice as likely to die early and even more likely to do so within five years of becoming famous.

  4. Lose weight too quickly
    Overweight people who are otherwise healthy may increase their risk of dying by intentionally losing weight, according to provocative research involving twins in Finland.
    The research found that those who were overweight who lost weight on purpose were about 86 percent more likely to die for any reason over the next 18 years compared with those whose weight remained stable. Chocolate cake - yes please !

  5. Watch your diet too closely
    Although a high cholesterol level is bad for you - bizarrely enough, a low cholesterol is worse.
    A huge study in Austria showed that high cholesterol was predictive of death from coronary heart disease but low cholesterol results in increased all-cause mortality. Low cholesterol showed significant associations with death from cancer, liver diseases, and mental diseases.

  6. Stay single
    People who don't get married are much more likely to die young. A large research study showed some amazing findings. The researchers found that never-married people, compared with their married peers, are five times more likely to die of infectious disease, twice as likely to die in accidents, homicides, or suicides and nearly forty percent more likely to die of heart disease

  7. Get up too early in the morning
    It's official (hurray) - rising before 5 a.m. is very bad for your health.
    A study conducted in Japan has found that early risers have a higher risk of medical conditions that can lead to heart attack and stroke. People who habitually rose before 5 a.m. had 1.7 times greater risk of high blood pressure and were twice as likely to develop hardening of the arteries as those who got up 2 to 3 hours later, researchers found.

So - what should you do with this information if you want a long life?
It's a no brainer really - stay in bed all day with your partner, eating junk food and slobbing out while avoiding vitamins or healthy stuff at all costs. Stay cheerful and don't be seduced by a large deal from the recording industry. Stick to all that and you'll live forever .... how cool a life would that be?

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Salt and Blood Pressure in Children

Salt and Blood Pressure in Children

High salt diets in children lead to raised blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart disease and stroke later in life.

A new large research study showed that for each extra gram of salt eaten there was a 0.4mmHg (millimeters of mercury) increase in systolic blood pressure. This means that ten extra grams of salt a day would increase the upper blood pressure number (called the systolic blood pressure) by 4 mmHg

This is an important finding which confirms that eating too much salt increases blood pressure in childhood.

The differences in systolic blood pressure between children with higher and lower salt diets may appear small, but making reductions of this order in childhood is likely to translate into lower levels of blood pressure in adult life, with reduced risk of developing heart disease and stroke and potentially huge gains in public health being possible

The advice to parents is to read the labels, especially in foods where you wouldn't expect a lot of salt, such as cereals. Try to avoid high blood pressure in children by reducing their salt intake.

The Food Standards Agency in the UK recommends that younger children receive less salt than older ones.

Children aged from 1 to 3-years-old should have a maximum of 2gm salt per day,
Children aged from 4 to 6-year-olds should have a maximum of 3gm,
Children from 7 to 10 year-olds should have a maximum of 5gm and for 11 and older it should be 6gm at the very most.

They also recommend that babies never be given extra salt on their food.

These figures are maximum daily recommendations, and parents should strive to have less than that, if possible.

What you do now in terms of your child's salt intake could shape their health record for the rest of their lives.

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Hyperexol - Hyperexol for High Blood Pressure

Buy Hyperexol

Read reviews for hyperexol

Hyperexol is a non drug combination product that some people have found helpful in the treatment of high blood pressure.

The manufacturers say that Hyperexol consists of naturally potent "targeted nutrients" that are essential in making it effective, yet still safe enough to take everyday.

Hyperexol contains no chemically generated compounds, fillers, or artificial additives and unlike pharmaceutical drugs, does not require a prescription and has ZERO negative side effects.

I've had good feedback from several of my patients who've tried using hyperexol - and it seems to work well on its own in mild high blood pressure, or in combination with other blood pressure medications when the blood pressure problem is more significant.

Follow the link at the top of this page if you're interested in trying hyperexol. You can buy it at a discount price directly from the manufacturer.

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Start a Heart - Save a Life

Heart Start Machine

Could you save a life if you had to? Could you? Right now? Right this minute now?

Research has shown that if someone has a cardiac arrest then the clock starts ticking from the very first second and every minute is vital if they are to have a chance of survival.

Only one person in every twenty lives to tell the tale if they have a cardiac arrest outside of hospital - and yet statistics show that the commonest place to have a cardiac arrest is at home or at work.

New autotmatic electronic defibrillator devices (AED's) or Heart Start machines as they are sometimes called are easy to use and really quite inexpensive.

I've written a comprehensive article about saving a life with an automatic defibrillator heart start machine on the website Squidoo.

Read more about this by clicking on the link below:

Heart Start Machine

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Dr Cameron Says:

As a family doctor and a blood pressure sufferer myself I know that people are often confused by medical terms and mumbo jumbo. You won't find that here - just simple, plain, high quality advice about high blood pressure and related issues.
I hope you find the articles helpful.

Drop by again, I add new content regularly

Oh, and if you'd like to receive a free, no obligation, regular update on all things blood pressure related then just leave me your details below.

Please do it - I'd love to keep you up to date with breaking news and the best treatments available.